RNA Biology (Dec 2022)

MicroRNA mimics can distort physiological microRNA effects on immune checkpoints by triggering an antiviral interferon response

  • Felix Prinz,
  • Katharina Jonas,
  • Amar Balihodzic,
  • Christiane Klec,
  • Andreas Reicher,
  • Dominik Andreas Barth,
  • Jakob Riedl,
  • Armin Gerger,
  • Tobias Kiesslich,
  • Christian Mayr,
  • Beate Rinner,
  • Julia Kargl,
  • Martin Pichler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2022.2152978
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1305 – 1315

Abstract

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The microRNA-200 family has wide-ranging regulatory functions in cancer development and progression. Above all, it is strongly associated with the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a process during which cells change their epithelial to a mesenchymal phenotype and acquire invasive characteristics. More recently, miR-200 family members have also been reported to impact the immune evasion of cancer cells by regulating the expression of immunoinhibitory immune checkpoints (ICs) like PD-L1. Therefore, we aimed to comprehensively characterize this miR-200 family as a regulatory interface between EMT and immune evasion mechanisms in biliary tract cancer. Initial correlation analyses and transient overexpression experiments using miRNA mimics suggested miR-200c-3p as a putative regulator of ICs including PD-L1, LGALS9, and IDO1. However, these effects could not be confirmed in stable miR-200c-3p overexpression cell lines, nor in cells transiently transfected with miR-200c-3p mimic from an independent manufacturer. By shifting our efforts towards dissecting the mechanisms leading to these disparate effects, we observed that the initially used miR-200c-3p mimic triggered a double-stranded (ds)RNA-dependent antiviral response. Besides upregulating the ICs, this had substantial cellular consequences including an induction of interferon type I and type III expression, increased levels of intracellular dsRNA sensors, and a significantly altered cellular growth and apoptotic activity.Our study highlights the capability of miRNA mimics to non-specifically induce a dsRNA-mediated antiviral interferon response. Consequently, phenotypic alterations crucially distort physiological miRNA functions and might result in a major misinterpretation of previous and future miRNA studies, especially in the context of IC regulation.

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